- Fri May 06, 2011 6:20 am
#342357
That's part of the issue. The determining factor isn't really what SL I think is best, it's more a matter of what's the highest SL I can get to given my Tuesday deadline. I knew up front that I wouldn't be looking at SL17-18. I'd be content with 10ish which is still pretty noisy but for this project it'll be ok. This is just for a client to see what the building looks like rather than some sort of marketing animation and at any rate it's a step up from the animations they've gotten from me in the past which are simple SketchUp animations which have been acceptable. I'm hoping to clear up some of these bugs so I can build on this experience in the future on more crucial projects. Even had I been able to determine that I have X hours to render and divided the frames up according to the speed of each computer, I still would have been missing the bug factor which has significantly cut down the time each machine has been up and rendering and either machine has been down for different times because of my issues.
As for this machine, I don't have full control over it. It's a server located in the IT department. Fortunately it has very few functions but they spent a lot of money on it which makes it perfect as a render node...or rather it would be perfect if I never ran into any bugs/crashes/network issues/etc. Although I don't have full access, nor do I even have remote login capability, the IT guys are pretty accommodating and restart the node all the time for me and have been really good throughout this whole animation ordeal. The biggest issue with not having access is well illustrated by what happened tonight. I left work at 5pm, did some stuff and just got in at 10pm and remotely logged into my work computer. The progressive animation script is still running fine however, the rendering I was running on the server via Monitor had stopped working again. In fact it stopped at 5:06pm, six minutes after I'd left work. /cry And I can't restart the node and no one is there to restart it for me.
I found a batch script that is supposed to be able to restart a program that has crashed or hung though. I'm going to see if they can combine that with some sort of scheduler to run the script every 10 minutes or so. If it works how I hope it will, it won't fix the crashes, but at least there will be much less downtime. My rendering today would have started back up by 5:16pm instead of sitting there doing nothing until 9am tomorrow when IT gets around to restarting the node.
-Brodie